More on the funding of acupuncture quackery by Medicaid

Jann Bellamy frequently writes about what she refers to as “legislative alchemy“; that is, attempts by advocates of unscientific, pseudoscientific systems of medicine like traditional Chinese medicine or naturopathy to slap a patina of legitimacy on their quackery through state licensure of practitioners. There is another form of legislative alchemy, however, that doesn’t involve licensing quacks. There are two keys to the perception of legitimacy of a medical specialty among the public, and certainly one is licensure by the state. However, a second key is reimbursement for services by third party payers, particularly government payers like Medicaid and Medicare. Although I had been vaguely aware of such efforts before, to my knowledge they have been scattered and in general relatively unsuccessful, in contrast to efforts to insinuate quackery into Veterans Health Administration hospitals.

The quickest way to erase pain is to give patients an opioid. But a rise in prescriptions has fueled a national epidemic of fatal overdoses, with a large share of the deaths occurring in low-income communities.

Under intense pressure to combat the problem, states across the country are expanding their Medicaid programs to cover alternative treatments such as acupuncture, massage, and yoga. The effort could increase non-opioid options for low-income patients suffering from pain. But it also opens states to criticism from skeptics who say taxpayers are being forced to fund unproven treatments based on political expediency instead of sound science.

Ohio’s Medicaid department took the most dramatic step this month by extending coverage of acupuncture treatments delivered by non-medical providers for patients with low-back pain and migraines, a step likely to allow much greater access and attract new practitioners to the field.

As I’ve noted for at least a few years now, these sorts of decisions are the culmination of a strategy that is as old as alarm in public health circles about the rise of opioid addiction and the wave of overdose deaths sweeping the nation.

Co-opting the opioid crisis: A calculated strategy to sell quackery

It’s become increasingly clear to me that the opioid crisis has been adopted by advocates of “integrating” quackery into medicine as the most important new “foot in the door” or “wedge” to open the way to the legitimization and funding of pseudoscientific treatments like acupuncture. Basically, advocates of “integrative medicine” are taking advantage of the urgency of the current search for non-opioid and non-pharmacologic treatments for chronic pain to promote their placebo-based pseudoscience as the solution to the crisis. It’s become one of the main talking points used by advocates to open the door for the “integration” of mystical, prescientific, and pseudoscientific treatments like acupuncture into medicine. Indeed, whenever you hear the terms “non-drug therapy” or “nonpharmacologic management of pain” used by advocates with respect to the opioid crisis and chronic pain management, it’s code for placebo-based quackery. The quacks are not even subtle about it.

It’s a rationale that comes right from the top, from the most prominent proponents of “integrative medicine.” For instance, the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) featured the opioid crisis as a compelling reason for its existence in its latest five year strategic plan, which made the “nonpharmacologic management of pain” one of its top research priorities. Since then, NCCIH has been promoting such approaches, science-based or quackery like acupuncture, as its own, the better to seamlessly integrate pseudoscience with science. Elsewhere, the same sort of rationale is used to justify the introduction of quackery into the VA medical system. Even the FDA is considering encouraging knowledge about chiropractic and acupuncture as approaches for chronic pain.

But Ohio is not alone. Eleven other states have implemented policies to encourage beneficiaries to use alternative therapies to help manage their pain and limit reliance on opioids, according to a 2016 survey by the National Academy for State Health Policy. In addition to acupuncture, covered services include massage, yoga, chiropractic manipulation, and various forms of physical and behavioral therapy, among others.

Two states, Maine and Vermont, are currently considering whether to expand coverage of acupuncture to treat pain after conducting studies to test its effectiveness for beneficiaries.

I’ve already discussed in detail how this is happening in Ohio. Let’s take a look at other states.

Beyond Ohio

The STAT article notes several other states considering letting Medicaid recipients choose acupuncture and other alternative treatments, which brings us back to Vermont:

“Acupuncture is not going to solve the opioid crisis,” said Robert Davis, an acupuncturist who led Vermont’s Medicaid study. “But acupuncture is one tool that helps patients. It helps them get their feet back under them.” Vermont’s study found that, among about 150 pain patients, acupuncture improved patients’ rating of pain, fatigue, depression, and other measures — though the study didn’t include a control group, and so may have reflected a placebo effect.

Although I did it once before, I encourage you to read the study again in more detail. It was not published in any peer-reviewed medical journal, just on the Vermont Legislature website. It is an utterly worthless study, a total waste of Vermont taxpayer money. Indeed, you can tell this study is utterly useless from its design as described in the abstract:

A pilot-level prospective pragmatic intervention trial design was chosen as the most appropriate approach for this project after a thorough analysis of the legislative goals, resources, and timeline provided by Act 173, along with a review of the existing scientific literature. Several acupuncture trialists considered to be subject-matter experts by their peers were consulted in order to confirm the soundness of this approach. Qualitative interviews were also utilized to understand the experience from the patients’ perspective. Pragmatic trials are designed to answer questions useful to clinicians and policy makers because they aim to maximize external validity and generalizability to a real-world setting. This pilot included a heterogeneous group of chronic pain patients that were treated by Vermont-licensed acupuncturists who provided treatment in their private clinics in line with their standard practice. This design was intended to reflect what would happen if acupuncture reimbursement were offered for local chronic pain patients by the local population of acupuncturists. As a Phase 1 uncontrolled pilot, this study was designed to provide qualitative and implementation data that may help policy-makers. The Department of Vermont Health Access (DVHA) decided this was the best research design available in the short timeframe. A thorough description of the rationale for this approach is described in the Progress Report to the Legislature and a journal article published on this topic.

Whenever you hear the words “pilot” and “pragmatic” in a description of a study design for an intervention designed to treat a subjective complaint like pain, you know it’s guaranteed to show a positive result, thanks to placebo effects. Acupuncturists love pragmatic studies for this very reason. It is true that pragmatic studies are designed to test interventions as used in the “real world,” but there is an assumption behind them, namely that the treatment being tested has already been shown to be efficacious in well-designed randomized controlled clinical trials. Indeed, for real interventions, frequently what is found in pragmatic trials is that the treatment doesn’t work as well in the “real world” as it did in clinical trials, usually because of the variability and lack of consistency that inevitably arise when treatments are released “into the wild.” In the case of treatments that don’t work better than placebo but do induce placebo effects, pragmatic trials almost always show more efficacy than well-designed randomized trials. Again, that’s the point. This trial is so useless that it’s hardly worth even citing its results.

If you want an idea of how biased this study is, just look at some of the comments from patients included in Appendix A:

“My acupuncture was life changing… I saw and felt and continue to feel a marked difference in my pain and mental clarity. I believe it saved my life.”

“Acupuncture helped me to get my life back.”

“I was very skeptical about this treatment being effective. As the weeks went by, I noticed different changes taking place in my body: my digestive system functioned much better, so my diet improved; I required less sleeping medication because my sleep was better; my pain level was much decreased; I had more genuine energy; and most especially, I had better mobility. The mobility change enabled me to walk more in fresh air and increased my good energy level. A circle of reinforcements that has made my life much better, more productive and happier. It has cut down my need for other medical interventions like physical therapy and medications for various ailments. People have noticed the outward improvement.”

“I went to a regular doctor for over six years and my pain only became more intense and more frequent. This is the longest I’ve gone without pain or medication in well over a year.”

“this is a very necessary way to treat pain. I am very allergic to many medications and during the study I was able to walk and do more without an allergic reaction.”

You get the idea.

STAT does note that the evidence base for acupuncture is pretty thin, citing Cochrane reviews on acupuncture as a treatment for various conditions. Cochrane, for instance, points out that the there is a short term small benefit for patients with chronic low back pain but “notes that most studies are of low quality”; that acupuncture can help arthritis patients, but that the benefits are “too small, and too susceptible to placebo, to be considered clinically relevant”; and that acupuncture can offer a small benefit for migraines. (Note: Acupuncture doesn’t work for migraine, as Steve Novella has explained.)

As states weigh the evidence and opposing arguments, many are moving cautiously. In Vermont, the Medicaid department is still considering how to translate the findings of its study into recommendations to state lawmakers, who will ultimately decide whether to expand coverage.

Elsewhere:

Oregon has created a similar approach, according to the survey by the National Academy for State Health Policy. The state covers several treatment options for patients with low-back pain, including acupuncture, chiropractic care, physical and occupational therapy, and behavioral therapy. The state also recommends treatment plans that include yoga, massage, and exercise therapy, although applicability of those services is determined by organizations that coordinate care for Oregon’s Medicaid beneficiaries.

The future of Medicaid?

Given the seriousness of the opioid epidemic and the public health imperative to institute policies to bring it under control, it is not surprising that integrative medicine advocates saw an opening. I don’t believe that they are being cynical or disingenuous (at least not the vast majority of them). Rather, they really believe that their quackery really can function as nonpharmacologic treatments for chronic pain. In other words, the vast majority of them are true believers, not scammers. The problem is that they are incorrect.

Alternative medicine, in particular acupuncture, is not the answer—or even one among many answers—to the opioid crisis. Worse, government funding tends to be a zero sum game, particularly now, which means that any funds diverted to pay for acupuncture and other alternative medicine, be it to provide services to those with chronic pain or to do research on non-opioid and non-pharmacologic treatments for pain, are funds not available to pay for science-based treatment. Unfortunately, I predict that acupuncture advocates and advocates of other unscientific treatments will likely be as persistent as naturopaths in pursuing their state-by-state legislative goals. As much as I’m half tempted to welcome them to the bureaucratic pain that is accepting Medicaid reimbursement and the very low reimbursement rates with a hearty, “Be careful what you wish for, you just might get it,” we proponents of science-based medicine need to resist these incursions in each state where we become aware of them.

8 Comments

Possibly a stupid question, but other than the lying about it’s effectiveness, what is the difference between a placebo like acupuncture and mental exercises to manage pain? In both cases you’re trying to distract yourself from the pain, and concentrate on something else. Whether it’s a pill, meditation, being a pin cushion, or concentrating on work, they all seek to get your mind off of what is hurting instead of concentrating on it. I understand that ethically, paternalism is a bad thing for doctors to indulge in, but training someone on mental games to play to minimize pain seems to have a heavy dose of that.

Saying that, I’m a proponent of those mind games that pain specialists teach as it has made the life of many people I know tolerable.

I’m not sure the “Resistance” is having much effect as these reports seem to be escalating, not diminishing. My Medicare Advantage plan covers acupunture for pain and nausea–presumably because it is now widely accepted that there is evidence to support this. It’s all part and parcel to the general dumbing down of education.

I know this is a serious subject, but reading what was in Appendix A made me laugh. You see, most of those things are identical to the statements made by satisfied customers of a local custom orthotics store here.

Here’s another question I have about this whole “use acupuncture in place of opiates”: where are they going to get the providers? If the places most affected by the opiate epidemic are rural, with few providers, how are the Medicare recipients going to find an acupuncturist? Isn’t that a big part of the problem in the first place, that patients are in pain because they can’t get in to (or just plain get to) physical therapy or a pain-management clinic?

To be clear, this isn’t me being a big-city jerk about rural people and acupuncture. The very first time I ever encountered anyone receiving acupuncture was as a little Brownie (Girl Scout) selling cookies in the sticks when a neighbor answered the door with an arm full of pins. But the whole point of “rural” is “low population density”.

[…] No sooner do I discuss how they are co-opting the opioid crisis as a “rationale” for integrating quackery into medicine for the treatment of chronic pain than they serve up another example of just that tendency. I saw […]

I am always alarmed by ideas such as these, because as soon as they get “alternatives” in place, anyone using opioids as part of their pain management will be forced into this woo, and assured it is their bad attitude reducing its efficacy rather than the reality that it is merely placebo. The loosely organized interstitial cystitis patients on Facebook are reporting at least one suicide per month as IC patients lose their pain management and have it replaced with Tylenol and dismissive pats on the head.

Ohio’s Medicaid program is severely underfunded and evidence-based treatments for opiod addiction are unsupported or have long waiting lists. Diverting scarce funds for treatments proven to be ineffective is criminal.